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Please please please dissolve into nothingness, and all the "people" that strove for this shit instead of making fun games, I wish them to never work in the industry again 👍
Representation fails when the tools were never built for you in the first place. Landmark research from Yale University, supported by the Bungie Foundation, is rebuilding hair tech to better represent Afro-textured hair in games. Read our full blog âŹ‡ïž bungiefoundation.org/article

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Provide the references . He did quite the opposite in condemning the publication 'Justice', in 1903 with the accusation that it "..in its evil-minded desire to injure a Socialist editor sneering at him as a ‘German-Venezuelan-Jew’. In other words, directly appealing to racial antipathies and religious prejudices." " ..strove to divert the wrath of the advanced workers from the capitalists to the Jews; how its readers were nauseated by denunciations of ‘Jewish millionaires’, ‘Jewish plots’, ‘Jew-controlled newspapers’, ‘German Jews’, ‘Israelitish schemes’, and all the stock phrases of the lowest anti-Semitic papers,"
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Replying to @kizu_skip
Shirou in the fate route had a clear cut goal of wanting to see saber again, nobody knows how he did it, but he did. He strove to become the hero of justice. Just to see her again, because that was his biggest motivation, it didn't quite end well with archer
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😉Strove with us and Itymoneus I slew.đŸ€đŸ€­đŸ„±
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Replying to @rickbrennanjr
All Valid and Licit Bishops are and were in Communion with Rome. The Fourth Lateran reiterates the proper understanding of the Ecclesiology. One thing that’s rather beautiful about Nestorianism is Nestorius’s Archbishopric. Fourth Council of the Lateran “During the pontificate of Innocent III (1198-1216) there appears to have occurred much growth in the reform of the church and in its freedom from subservience to the empire as well as in the primacy of the bishop of Rome and in the summoning of ecclesiastical business to the Roman curia. Innocent himself, turning his whole mind to the things of God, strove to build up the christian community. Spiritual things, and therefore the church, were to have first place in this endeavour; so that human affairs were to be dependent upon, and to draw their justification from, such considerations. Renewing the ancient privileges of the patriarchal sees, we decree, with the approval of this sacred universal synod, that after the Roman church, which through the Lord’s disposition has a primacy of ordinary power over all other churches inasmuch as it is the mother and mistress of all Christ’s faithful, the church of Constantinople shall have the first place, the church of Alexandria the second place, the church of Antioch the third place, and the church of Jerusalem the fourth place, each maintaining its own rank. Thus after their pontiffs have received from the Roman pontiff the pallium, which is the sign of the fullness of the pontifical office, and have taken an oath of fidelity and obedience to him they may lawfully confer the pallium on their own suffragans, receiving from them for themselves canonical profession and for the Roman church the promise of obedience. They may have a standard of the Lord’s cross carried before them anywhere except in the city of Rome or wherever there is present the supreme pontiff or his legate wearing the insignia of the apostolic dignity. In all the provinces subject to their jurisdiction let appeal be made to them, when it is necessary, except for appeals made to the apostolic see, to which all must humbly defer.” #CatholicX
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I’ve been teaching Social Studies 9 for the last 3 months, and it’s become so obvious that God gave this land to the French and British people. (I’m neither F nor B.) When they were still Christians, they strove to be worthy; but everything changed. It’s the book of Judges.
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“And he removed from thence, and digged another well; and for that they strove not: and he called the name of it Rehoboth; and he said, For now the Lord hath made room for us, and we shall be fruitful in the land.” – Genesis 26:22 (KJV)
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“And they digged another well, and strove for that also: and he called the name of it Sitnah.” – Genesis 26:21 (KJV)
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“And the herdmen of Gerar did strive with Isaac’s herdmen, saying, The water is ours: and he called the name of the well Esek; because they strove with him.” – Genesis 26:20 (KJV)
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Like a vessel of glass, she strove and sank.đŸ˜¶đŸ€Ż
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As though he strove to plead his cause.đŸ«„đŸ˜ŻđŸ€ 
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Replying to @JohnJackDempsey
it is, at one point in time people strove to create beautiful things irregardless of how slow or costly it may have been whereas now we appear to have traded it in for cheap and fast, we’ve become a soulless world
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℣. Grant, Lord, a blessing. Benediction. May God the Father Omnipotent, be to us merciful and clement. ℟. Amen. Reading 4 Ephraem was of Syrian descent, and son of a citizen of Nisibis. While yet a young man he went to the holy bishop James, by whom he was baptized, and he soon made such progress in holiness and learning as to be appointed master of a flourishing school at Nisibis, a city of Mesopotamia. After the death of the bishop James, Nisibis was captured by the Persians, and Ephraem went to Edessa. Here he settled first on the mountain among the monks, and then, that he might avoid the great numbers of men who flocked to him, he adopted the eremitical life. He was ordained deacon of the Church of Edessa, but refused the priesthood out of humility. He was conspicuous with the splendour of every virtue and strove to acquire piety and religion by professing true wisdom. He placed all his hope in God alone, despised all human and transitory things, and always longed for the divine and eternal. ℣. But thou, O Lord, have mercy upon us. ℟. Thanks be to God. ℟. The Lord made him honourable, and defended him from his enemies, and kept him safe from those that lay in wait for him; * And gave him perpetual glory. ℣. He went down with him into the pit, and left him not in bonds. ℟. And gave him perpetual glory.
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Replying to @FiadhBaikal
I think this is one of the only times I ever saw him get so vocally angry at someone he was speaking with. There was genuine anger in his voice when he said “because they didn’t believe it.” We lost one of the best when he died. One of the last people who strove for unity.
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We have vast mass migration And yes, an Anglo Australian monoculture is 100% what we should strove for.
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He made this reference to some of them about a year before the last supper. At the last supper He clarified this idea even further. Pagan Romans twisted this scripture to fit with former Roman pagan beliefs of eating the flesh of a particular pagan Roman God. John 6:51-56 51 I am the living bread which came down from heaven: if any man eat of this bread, he shall live for ever: and the bread that I will give is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world. 52 The Jews therefore strove among themselves, saying, How can this man give us his flesh to eat? 53 Then Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, ye have no life in you. 54 Whoso eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, hath eternal life; and I will raise him up at the last day. 55 For my flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed. 56 He that eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, dwelleth in me, and I in him.
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đŸ€·â€â™‚ïž MLK was a decent human. He strove for success he was a man of good. He was civil and kind. He thought all blacks could be the same but to you that’s “sugar coated slavery” you don’t want to be decent you want to be animals you want to be criminals and anything short of just
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Replying to @StrivingBen @grok
Saying they "strove to minimise" means nothing when your own bot says 83% of the dead are civilians. If you have advanced precision tech and still manage to kill a vastly higher percentage of civilians than historical averages, that’s failure to minimise. Proves the IDF dont care
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Funny but again you’re a propagating the same logical error transgender use. It took a couple decades pour it to be OK for men to be hairdressers and nurses and women to be doctors without having to cut off our genitals. Your post is propagating the same stereotypical roles we strove to break.
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St. Ephrem, Deacon Confessor & Doctor of the Church June 18th “Ephraem was of Syrian descent and son of a citizen of Nisibis. While yet a young man he betook himself to the holy bishop James, by whom he was baptized, and he soon made such progress in holiness and learning as to be appointed master in the school of Nisibis in Mesopotamia. After the death of the bishop James Nisibis was captured by the Persians, and Ephraem went to Edessa, where he settled first among the monks in the mountains. Later, to avoid the company of those who flocked to him, he adopted the eremitical life. He was made deacon of the church of Edessa, but refused the priesthood out of humility. He was rich in all virtues and strove to acquire piety and religion by the following of true wisdom. He placed all his hope in God, despised all human and transitory things, and was ever filled with the earnest desire of those which are divine and eternal. He was led by the Spirit of God to CĂŠsarea in Cappadocia, where he saw Basil, the mouthpiece of the Church, and they obtained benefit from their mutual intercourse. In order to refute the many errors which troubled the Church at that time, and to expound the mysteries of Jesus Christ, he wrote many books in the Syrian tongue, almost all of which have been translated into Greek. St. Jerome bears witness that he attained such fame that his writings were read publicly in the churches after the reading from the Holy Scriptures. On account of his works, so full of the light of heavenly doctrine, he was greatly honored even during his lifetime as a Doctor of the Church. He composed a poem in praise of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the saints for which he was called by the Syrians the Harp of the Holy Ghost. He was noted for his great and tender devotion towards the immaculate Virgin. He died, rich in merits, at Edessa in Mesopotamia, on the fourteenth of the Kalends of July, in the reign of Valens. Pope Benedict XV, at the instance of many Cardinals of the holy Roman Church, patriarchs, archbishops, bishops, abbots and religious communities, declared him by a decree of the Sacred Congregation of Rites to be a Doctor of the Universal Church.” (The Liturgical Year, 1841-1875, Dom Prosper GuĂ©ranger)
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